Student Resources

HISD Code of Student Conduct

“Each student in HISD public schools is responsible for exhibiting the highest standards of behavior to create a positive and welcoming school atmosphere. The HISD Code of Student Conduct defines systemwide expectations for student behavior and provides means for constructive student-administrator relationships.” – HISD Student Congress 2014-2015

The Houston Independent School District has established as one of its primary goals the provision of a high-quality educational program for each student in a safe school environment free of disruptions that interfere with the educational process. The purpose of this Code of Student Conduct is to inform all school staff, students, and parents of HISD’s expectations regarding behavior and conduct. The Code, reviewed and approved by the HISD Board of Education, is based on the policies of the Board of Education and Administrative Regulations. Administrative Regulations communicates District administrative procedures and practices.

This Code was developed to protect the rights of all students by:

providing a districtwide discipline management plan

specifying the behavior that is expected of all students

describing the broad range of student misconduct and providing appropriate disciplinary consequences or options for the various kinds of misconduct

outlining student rights relating to school

listing procedures that must be followed when applying consequences

School staff, students, and parents are expected to become familiar with the provisions of the districtwide Code of Student Conduct and the rules and regulations adopted and implemented by individual schools based on their School-Based Discipline Management System. Students are also expected to abide by the policies set forth in the Code so that they can get the most out of their years in school.

Offering summer school, weekend activities, community projects, or summer jobs that will allow students with discretionary offenses to return to their home campus instead of beginning the new school year in the DAEP.

Moving most non-statutory Level IV offenses to Level III and identifying them as offenses with an elevated safety risk to the campus.